THE GREEN ODYSSEY By PHILIP JOSE FARMER

He sounded plaintive, even to himself, for he knew how vast space was and how complicated astromathematics was. And of course there was no guarantee that the Earthman would even be a navigator. He might just be an officer or perhaps a civilian official who was being ferried in one of the swifter small ships.

Then there was the awful possibility that the vessel might have landed here because there was something wrong with it, and that it could not rise again even if it had a full crew. In fact, that was the most logical explanation.

He sighed and turned to the boy.

“This may be for nothing, but we can’t just sit down and watch. Let’s take off for the windbreak.”

“What are we going to do there?” asked Grizquetr, as they walked down the steps.

“Well, we’re not going back to the yacht,” Green answered. “Soldiers’ll be waiting there to arrest us. No, we’ll go to the other side of the ‘break. Stealing another ‘roller isn’t going to get us in any more trouble than we’re already in.”

The boy’s eyes widened. “What’re we doing that for?”

“We must return to the island-fortress of Shimdoog.”

“What? Why, that’s a hundred miles away!”

“Yes, I know. And we won’t be able to make the speed going back that we did coming. We’ll have to do quite a lot of tacking to sail against the wind, and that’ll eat up our time. But there’s nothing else to do.”

“If you say so, father, I believe you. But what is there on Shimdoog?”

“Not on. In.”

Grizquetr was a bright lad. He was silent for a minute, so silent Green could imagine he heard the wheels turning within his head. Then he said, “There must be a cave on Shimdoog like the one on the cannibals’ island. And you must have gone into it that night we stayed in the ‘break. I remember waking up and hearing you and Mother say something about your being gone and about Miran following you.”

Grizquetr paused, then said, “If there is a cave-entrance there, why haven’t other people gone into it?”

“Because it has been declared taboo, off limits, by the priests of Estorya. It was done so long ago that I imagine that the priests themselves have forgotten why they forbade its access to men. But it’s not hard to reconstruct the historical causes. Once, I suppose, the island was populated by cannibals. At the time the Estoryans captured the island they exterminated the aborigines. They found the cave mouth was a holy place for the savages. So, thinking that it held demons – and it does, in a way – they built a wall around it and set up a statue of the Fish Goddess, facing inward and holding in her hand a symbol to restrain the imprisoned fiends from breaking loose. That symbol, of course, is the same charm that is sold on the streets of Estorya, that circumscribes the country and the island of Shimdoog. It is the same as the spaceship that landed near the King’s palace.”

Green hailed a rickshaw and continued his account while they rode through the still-crowded streets. There was so much noise that he felt quite safe talking, provided he kept his voice soft.

By the time they had reached the northern end of the windbreak, Green had told the boy all he thought he should hear at that time. If, later on, his trip to Shimdoog proved successful he would enlighten him even more.

For the present he was concerned with the problem of getting transportation. Fortunately they found almost at once a nice little yacht with speedy lines and a tall mast. The craft must have belonged to a wealthy man, for a watchman sat close to it before a little fire just outside his shed. Green walked up to him, and when the fellow rose, his hand suspiciously resting upon his spear, Green struck him on the jaw, then followed with a hard right to the pit of his stomach. Grizquetr completed the job by hitting him over the head with a length of pipe he’d picked up off the ground.

Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80

Leave a Reply 0

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *